"This has been the biggest nightmare that I?ve ever seen," said Tina Clarke, as she waited for a towing yard to release her vehicles.

"Every morning when I wake up, you get two seconds to breath, and then you?re right back into the nightmare," she added.

Police haven?t named a suspect in the killing of Jaymie Adams, who disappeared in December before someone found her body a month later on a dirt trail in southeast Oklahoma City.

Clarke feels that she and her son, Justin Adams, are both considered suspects.

"I feel like (investigators) are constantly harassing me," she said. "I didn?t do a thing. The only thing I?m guilty of is trying to find my daughter."

Clarke?s comments came on the same day that police released two vehicles that were searched for evidence. According to a search warrant, investigators seized "four soil samples" from the van that Jaymie was driving on the same night she disappeared.

Clarke said she?s also upset because she was forced to pay a wrecker service $412 so she could get back her car. The family van was repossessed because no one had made any payments on it.

Eyewitness News 5 asked police why Clarke was forced to foot the bill on evidence that was seized. Oklahoma City police gave the following statement in an email:

"Unless there is some prior arrangement made with the investigative unit, it's standard for the individual to be responsible for the wrecker fees."